University of Applied Arts Vienna
About this portal
The University of Applied Arts Vienna (Angewandte) enables its researchers to present their projects and findings on the Angewandte’s RC portal. In general, the Angewandte is developing innovative solutions for digitally supporting its staff, students, and alumni to publish, archive, and internationally connect their artistic and scientific research (e.g. repository). In this sense the RC is an important tool and an example of best practice.
contact person(s):
Alexander Damianisch ,
Marianna Mondelos ,
Wera Hippesroither url:
https://www.researchcatalogue.net/view/1851127/1851128
Recent Issues
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6. Art Research Envelope
The publication Envelope offers insights into ongoing PhD projects by candidates in the PhD programme PhD in Art at the University of Applied Arts Vienna in an innovative format. The major thrust of “Envelope” presents content supplied by doctoral researchers based on their individual artistic research and provides insights into ongoing work processes. These visual and textual traces reveal the state of the Art within its ongoing research processes. This open format seeks to reflect on experiences through exchange, as well as document relevant developments in the field of art and research. Further information: www.zentrumfokusforschung.uni-ak.ac.at.
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5. Art Research Envelope
The publication Envelope offers insights into ongoing PhD projects by candidates in the PhD programme PhD in Art at the University of Applied Arts Vienna in an innovative format. The major thrust of “Envelope” presents content supplied by doctoral researchers based on their individual artistic research and provides insights into ongoing work processes. These visual and textual traces reveal the state of the Art within its ongoing research processes. This open format seeks to reflect on experiences through exchange, as well as document relevant developments in the field of art and research. Further information: www.zentrumfokusforschung.uni-ak.ac.at.
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02. reposition Journal of reflective Positions in Art and Research
reposition Journal of reflective Positions in Art and Research
Support Project for Research Documentation at the University of Applied Arts Vienna
With contributions by Thomas Ballhausen (author and philosopher) and Elena Peytchinska (Institute of Fine Arts & Media Art – Stage and Film Design);
Pamela Breda (Digital Arts); Leo Hosp (Center Research Focus); Gabriela Krist (Institute of Conservation) and Marie-Christine Pachler (Institute of Conservation);
Mong-Sum Joseph Leung (Center Research Focus, PhD candidate PhD in Art); Bianca Ludewig (researcher and journalist), Magdalena Scheicher (researcher) and Conny Zenk (Center Research Focus, PhD candidate PhD in Art); Sophie Luger (Institute of Architecture) and Lenia Mascha (Institute of Architecture);
Imani Rameses (Center Research Focus, PhD candidate PhD in Art), Charlotta Ruth (Angewandte Performance Lab) and Jasmin Schaitl
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01. reposition Journal of reflective Positions in Art and Research
reposition Journal of reflective Positions in Art and Research
A publication of the Center Research Focus at the University of Applied Arts Vienna
Editorial Team: Gerald Bast, Alexander Damianisch, Barbara Putz-Plecko
With contributions by Pamela Bartar, Barbara Graf, Tanja Kimmel, Barb Macek, Valerie Messini, Verena Miedl-Faißt, Daniel Aschwanden†, Vera Sebert and Lucie Strecker.
Recent Activities
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Citizen Science - a new field for the arts?
(2023)
author(s): Pamela Marjan Bartar
published in: University of Applied Arts Vienna
Pamela Bartar’s (Center for Didactics of Art and Interdisciplinary Education) contribution "Citizen Science – a new field for the arts?" links Citizen Science with art-based research. Providing an overview of current approaches, Bartar illustrates how contemporary art can significantly contribute to the democratisation of science and the societal proximity of research, particularly focusing on socially engaged practices and collaborative knowledge production.
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Making museum repositories greener
(2023)
author(s): Tanja Kimmel
published in: University of Applied Arts Vienna
Tanja Kimmel (Institute of Conservation and PhD candidate Doctoral Programme in Philosophy) addresses the question of how art collections and conservation can become sustainable in her contribution "Making museum repositories greener". Sustainability poses a challenge for the art sector. While museums serve as role models for society and can thus contribute significantly to the discourse, they also have very high energy consumption and CO2 emissions due to their complex climatic technology. Kimmel mentions current initiatives and sustainability concepts of museums in Austria and abroad and discusses a case study featured in her dissertation that conducts a CO2 assessment of the central storage of the Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien in order to create the first profound data basis on climate-damaging emissions, which will then facilitate further action.
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Await what the stars will bring or moulding the gap
(2023)
author(s): Verena Miedl-Faißt
published in: University of Applied Arts Vienna
Verena Miedl-Faißt (Center Research Focus, PhD candidate PhD in Art) invites us with "Await what the stars will bring" to walk through her artistic research trajectory. Her contribution poetically narrates on longings, and on beautiful and painful experiences in connection with her artistic practice and collaborative work with her nephew L. Based on Donna Haraway’s concept of kinship, Miedl-Faißt searches for possibilities of relating to each other and seeks ways to make inner processes accessible. The contribution provides insights into her work with children and colleagues and how she creates “materialized relations, co-creations objecting time, space, and loneliness.”
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Stitches and Sutures. Textile Metaphors and Graphic Topologies as Methodological Artistic Tools
(2023)
author(s): Barbara Graf
published in: University of Applied Arts Vienna
Barbara Graf (Center Research Focus, PhD candidate PhD in Art) takes Jacques Lacan’s notions of the ‘upholstery button’ and the ‘suture’ as starting points to explore textile metaphors as methodological tools for her artistic practice, informed by her own bodily sensory experiences and experience of paresthesia as a person affected by MS. Graf’s contribution "Stitches and Sutures" searches for images of the invisible and explores how deeply subjective experiences can be made accessible and adequately expressed.
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Rewritable Creatures. Correspondence between Daniel Aschwanden, Vera Sebert and Lucie Strecker on Mimesis and Hybridity in Choreography
(2023)
author(s): Lucie Strecker, Vera Sebert
published in: University of Applied Arts Vienna
Lucie Strecker (Angewandte Performance Laboratory and Department of Art and Communication Practices) reveals the artistic working process preceding a production with the contribution "Rewritable Creatures", reflecting on mimesis and hybridity in choreography through an exchange of letters with the late performer Daniel Aschwanden (Angewandte Performance Laboratory and Department of Art and Communication Practices) and the author Vera Sebert. As the three letter-writers search, speculate and ask each other questions, the text becomes a written performance, revealing an immediate, polyphonic approach to the subject that allows readers to become part of the performance. In this way, processes of hybridisation become manifest in writing. The performance, however, cannot be completed; Aschwanden’s sudden death interrupts the text, turning the contribution, in a sense, into a memorial to an artist, friend, and colleague and the readers into witnesses.
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Exercises in Existential Eccentricity. Conceptualising autoimmunity as a variation of the conditio humana
(2023)
author(s): Barbara Macek
published in: University of Applied Arts Vienna
Barb Macek (PhD candidate and fellow (DOC) of the Austrian Academy of Sciences at the Institute of Fine Arts & Media Arts) takes as her starting point self-reflections and her own experiences with the autoimmune disease SLE. She approaches the phenomenon of autoimmunity in relation to fundamental human ambiguity, following the philosophical anthropology of Helmuth Plessner. Macek’s contribution, "Exercises in Existential Eccentricity", explores the bio-philosophical dimension of the disease rather than its bio-medical dimension, showing how autoimmunity raises existential-phenomenological questions regarding bodily ownership, the self, and the notion of the body as “one’s own”. From an assumed embodied diversity, she designs an artistic technique, EEE - Exercises in Existential Eccentricity, drawing on the technique of auto-interviewing, autoethnography and poetics to facilitate a dialogue between different inner voices.